When you're playing a romantic version of a real person, you're playing a version of the truth.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
If you take a lie and allow your desire for the truth, you'll end up with some truth - not fact, but something that gets you closer to the truth. That's what we want. When we go to a play, we need to be assured that the experience we're having.
I have played so many romantic roles that I don't know if I am really a romantic in real life. I get confused about the real me.
That's always fun to play: the person who can be truthful and blunt, and people take it because that's who she is.
The thing is, even if you're playing sort of a heightened character and playing inside sort of a heightened reality, you can still apply your own truths to those characters.
You want to be honest with a character and play it truthfully, and you want to be genuine with your character.
When a woman tells the truth she is creating the possibility for more truth around her.
Sometimes the truth hurts. And sometimes it feels real good.
I tend to play more true-to-life characters in real situations.
If you want to play the game of truth, I'll tell the truth, and the truth will burn.
A play is fiction - and fiction is fact distilled into truth.